Thursday, January 27, 2011

THE STATE OF HIP HOP Diverse Methods in Learning

THE STATE OF HIP HOP
Diverse Methods in Learning

This conference is comprised to discuss and raise awareness about Hip Hop Education and how it can be utilized as an alternative method of learning to shift the present paradigm in educational challenges that today’s urban youth encounter due to a suffering education system.


BaJa Ukweli
Program Coordinator/Outreach Officer – Africana Institute

Jah Jah Shakur
National Communication Director – The Temple of Hip Hop

Africana Institute
The Africana Institute at Essex County College is the center for exploration, celebration, and critical examination of the African global experience. The mission is to revitalize, reconnect and strengthen the global African cultural, social and intellectual heritage. For more information about the Africana Institute visit www.essex.edu/ai or contact us at 973.877.3219 or via email at africana@essex.edu.

The Temple of Hip Hop
Founded in 1996 by Hip Hop pioneer and legend KRS-ONE, the Temple Of Hip Hop is an international ministry, archive, school and society (M.A.S.S.) movement that teaches Hip Hop beyond entertainment. The TOHH promotes and preserves Hip Hop’s accumulated historical/cultural/spiritual wisdom for the purpose of empowering the Hiphoppa and guiding the Hip Hop nation.
The TOHH is beyond race, religion, ethnicity, gender, class and sexual orientation. The TOHH expresses Hip Hop as a unique way of life that promotes health, love, awareness and wealth (HLAW). The TOHH is not a place, a fan club, entertainment corporation or religious organization. The TOHH is a movement of conscious people who are committed to using Hip Hop as a life-strategy for spiritual enlightenment, creative expression and self-empowerment. 
The TOHH is concerned with the way in which Hip Hop Kulture will be documented and interpreted in world history. The TOHH is concerned with the spiritual awareness of the Hip Hop Nation. The TOHH does not seek to replace the general beliefs and practices of churches, mosques, synagogues, temples or lodges. Hip Hop has many different religious beliefs and is in harmony with a variety of spiritual views, customs, traditions and codes of conduct. Our body is the temple that Hip Hop expresses through, therefore we are the Temple of Hip Hop; we are not doing hip-hop, we are Hip Hop!   




THE STATE OF HIP HOP
Diverse Methods in Learning


PROGRAM


MASTER OF CEREMONY
Martha Diaz
Founding Director/President H2ED Center



12:00 – BaJa Ukweli Welcome Remarks

12:10 – Zul Latifah Libation

12:20 – African Origins of Hip Hop Cultural Presentation
            [African Drummers/DJ, Capoeria/Break Dancers,Heiroglyphics/Grafitti, Griots/MCs]

12:40 – Dr. Khalfani – Opening Remarks and Position

12:55 – Jah Jah Shakur – Hip Hop Studies commentary

1:10 – Martha Diaz – Introduction of Panelists and H2ED Center initiatives

1:25 – Panel Discussion 1– What is Hip Hop Studies?
            [Educators and Administrators]

2:10 – Panel Discussion 2 – What is Hip Hop Scholarship?
            [Artists Active in Hip Hop Studies]

2:55 – Panel Discussion 3 – What are the benefits of a Hip Hop Curriculum and Course of Study?
            [Community based organizations]

3:10 – Keynote Address – Dr. Cornell West and KRS ONE

5:10 – Q&A Session

5:40 – Closing Remarks – Dr. Akil Kokayi Khalfani




Invitation to the State of Hip Hop Conference

Dear Brother/Sister:                                                                                                                                      
                               

I would like to invite you to participate in our upcoming Hip Hop Mini-Conference in Spring 2011 at Essex County College in Newark, NJ.  The theme of the conference is "The State of Hip Hop: Diverse Methods of Learning."  It will be held in Smith Hall on April 9, 2011 from 12pm to 6pm.

Many people think that Hip Hop is just music, entertainment, and products just to be bought and sold. These manifestations are considered to be expressions or elements of a culture but not considered the culture itself. Mainstream corporate interests have the general public believing that what you see, hear, and read in the media is Hip Hop. What you are actually experiencing is the effects of the rap music industry and not Hip Hop in general.

On April 9, 2011, The Temple of Hip Hop has been asked to be in partnership with the Africana Institute at Essex County College, located in downtown Newark, NJ, to host “The State of Hip Hop: Diverse Methods of LearningConference.

The State of Hip Hop Conference has been established to demystify the meaning, purpose, and root causes of Hip Hop. This conference will also discuss and explore the impact that Hip Hop Education has on the American education system. Hip Hop Education is taught as a course of study at more than 300 schools of higher learning in America and worldwide. Stanford and Harvard University has the most profound Hip Hop educational models. You can get further information by going to hiphoparchive.org. The application of a Hip Hop curriculum within academia and institutions of higher learning has the ability to expand the parameters of teaching methods, in hopes to increase the educational success rate of an urban student population that has been systematically decreasing.

Also, this conference seeks to create a National Hip Hop united front that foresees the manifestation of a Hip Hop Studies department program at Essex County Community College and other schools of higher learning throughout America and the world.

As an advocate for educational parity and as a continuous practitioner and proponent of and for Hip Hop Education, humanity and higher learning, it would be necessary to have your involvement in order to make this conference and all of our initiatives a success.

In closing, we would be honored if you would join us on April 9th, 2011.

If you have any questions, please contact me at: 973.877.3219 or africanainstitute@gmail.com
Additional contact information: Jah Jah Shakur – jahjah@hiphoplives.net or BaJa Ukweli – bajaukweli@gmail.com

Hotep (Peace)
Akil Kokayi Khalfani, Ph. D
Director, Africana Institute, Essex County College

THE STATE OF HIP HOP - Diverse Methods in Learning

The State of Hip Hop
Diverse Methods in Learning

[Call for Position Papers]

 

The “State of Hip Hop Diverse Methods in Learning” conference is comprised to discuss and raise awareness about Hip Hop Education and how it can be utilized as an alternative method of learning to shift the present paradigm in educational challenges that today’s urban youth encounter due to a suffering education system.
We encourage you to articulate your vision of Hip Hop Studies and how it can act as a progressive catalyst in shifting the negative and counter-productive paradigm of education within the urban demographic and become a reigniting factor in creating interest in both higher learning and education through the application of a Hip Hop Studies curriculum. What are the most important aspects or issues for Hip Hop Studies?  As suggested above, Hip Hop Studies is not concerned with basic or generic agent concepts or technologies, but with specific orientation towards information systems and information systems development.

 [Submission Requirements]

 

Your position paper should not exceed 2 pages. It must either:
  1. What is Hip Hop Studies?
  2. What is Hip Hop Scholarship?
  3. What are the benefits of a Hip Hop Studies curriculum and course of study?
You must indicate under which of these three categories your position paper falls. A problem discussion must begin with a section called Problem Statement and must conclude with a section called Research Questions. An attack must first describe the position to be attacked in neutral language before it presents reasons why it should be rejected. A technology forecast should consist of one or more forecast statements with additional explanation. 

Position papers can be submitted, until 28 February for The State of Hip Hop: Diverse Methods in Learning at Essex County College by email to africanainstitute@gmail.com  in plain text.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

MLK prophesized the coming of Hip Hop

In early January of 2011, talk show host Tavis Smiley led a discussion called America’s Next Chapter with a panel of guests that included among others Maria Bartiromo from CNBC, Arianna Huffington of the Huffington Post and Dr. Cornel West who commented on Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Dream.”

He said “the problem is this, and this is part of the lies of the mainstream. People have reached the conclusion; Barack Obama is the fulfillment of King’s Dream. That’s not true. That’s not true. Our beloved president is A fulfillment of King’s Dream. He’s not THE fulfillment of King’s Dream. THE fulfillment is poor people, not just Black people but White and Red, not just in this country but around the World! That’s a helluva dream! Martin was that kind of a dreamer we got to be honest about it.”

I agree with that statement. Barack Obama is not the fulfillment of King’s Dream. And MLK did have a huge gap to cross at that time in August of 1963 to envision the multi-ethnic, multi-cultural, multi-denominational culture where you were judged by the content of your character rather than the race, nation or creed you came from. Even in religion, people stratify themselves according to race, economics or nationality. Since then, in 1963, we have made many strides in America culturally and have actually, fulfilled King’s Dream with the culture of Hip Hop. The Temple of Hip Hop is proud to be the first to let you know that if you already didn’t know. Yes Martin Luther King’s Dream has in reality been fulfilled! It has been fulfilled by the consciousness that created the true principles that birthed Hip Hop Kulture!

The Gospel of Hip Hop by KRSONE starts with a set of introductory chapters, the third one being called the Promised Land. In this chapter the idea of Hip Hop as the fulfillment of King’s Dream is discussed…

The Gospel of Hip Hop by KRSONE, The Promised Land, pg46-49 v76-88

And when we allow freedom to ring, when we let it ring from every village and hamlet, from every state and city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of GOD’s children—Black men and White men, Jews and Gentiles, Catholics and Protestants—will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old Negro spiritual, 'FREE AT LAST! FREE AT LAST! THANK GOD ALMIGHTY! WE ARE FREE AT LAST!' (MLK)

And with this decree, our nation was born! Our King, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., in the midst of war, injustice and poverty, saw the coming of a new raceless, classless, unified nation built upon the timeless principles of freedom, justice and equality. He saw the beginnings of what we now call “Hip Hop.”

Our King spoke us into existence. He spoke to and for the generation of his immediate children; those born between the years 1960 and 1970. This generation is the group that would eventually produce Hip Hop.

When our King said, I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their Character, most people assumed that the only nation our King could have been talking about was the United States of America. That one day IT would live up to ITS creed of  “all men” being “created equal” with the “unalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”

Indeed our King was talking about America as a nation, but it is clear that he was NOT talking about the America that he was protesting against at the time. He saw a radically different America than even the one that exists today! However, the King’s vision of true racial unity and equal citizenship under the law never fully materialized for the people of the United States.

Most Americans at the time felt that the King’s “I Have a Dream” decree was simply a powerfully moving speech. However, the King’s “Dream” in the realm of prophesy, prediction and instruction was not just (as the average American mind remembers it) protest words for his time. On the contrary, our King was not even speaking for his time; he was speaking for OUR TIME! He said, Nineteen sixty-three is not an end, but a beginning.

Most of what the King said in that famous decree was said in future tense: One day right there in Alabama, little Black boys and Black girls will be able to join hands with little White boys and White girls as sisters and brothers.

Most people, because of their own prejudices, refer to the phrase “…as brothers and sisters” figuratively and symbolically. They doubt that “little Black boys and girls” and “little White boys and girls” can actually be real brothers and sisters. And they doubt this because for Black children and White children to become real blood brothers and sisters this would mean the creation of a new race, a new sect of people, a new culture, and a new nation.

As prophesy, the King’s I Have a Dream decree calls a new people and nation into existence. And because he was speaking to the future of those youths (us) born between 1960 and 1970 (Generation X) who became the pioneers of  modern Hip Hop and instinctively created the alternative multicultural, multiracial, omni-faithed community that the King predicted, we have realized today that WE are the true citizens of the nation Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. dreamt about. HIP HOP IS THE PROMISED LAND!

Nowhere else in the World is the King’s Dream so accurately expressed as within Hip Hop. Nowhere else in the World is there an international culture that is truly home to all races, classes, ethnicities and religious beliefs without prejudice other than Hip Hop. Sure, individuals may practice such a vision, but as for the social structures and foundations of whole communities, none can match the inclusive nature of Hip Hop today—even the African American community itself has not risen to the character and vision of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Nowhere else in the World is a person truly judged by the “content of their character” as opposed to the “color of their skin” than within Hip Hop. Hip Hop even fulfills the King’s economic strategies for lower income and poor people. HIP HOP IS THE PROMISED LAND.

Our King said, One day on red hills of Georgia, sons of former slaves and sons of former slave owners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood. Nowhere has this happened in the World culturally on a mainstream level except within the international community of Hip Hop. In fact, nowhere in the World could this type of unity happen because our King was specific to the historical relationship between Africans and Europeans in America.

As pimped-out, thugged-out, materialistic and drugged-out as we may appear to be today, Hip Hop is still NOT a racist culture. Our existence as a Hip Hop community literally fulfills the prophecy of our King spiritually and historically. Hip Hop is the “freedom” spoken of by the King.

Within our Hip Hop community a person gains money, power and respect through a display of high skill in one or more of Hip Hop’s unique artistic elements. Here, you are truly judged by the “content of your character” (your attributes, your principles, your abilities, your reputation, who you associate with) not by your race or ethnic origin or financial status. Real Hip Hop is beyond all of that. HIP HOP IS THE PROMISED LAND! (KRSONE, the Gospel of Hip Hop)

Now we ask you. Is the Temple of Hip Hop wrong for thinking this way about Hip Hop Kulture? Is Hip Hop the fulfillment of King’s Dream in your eyes? A simple yes or no will do but feel free to comment in depth. Then on January 30th we will be having an open discussion on the importance of King’s Dream and the end of race in the 21st century. Just go to http://hiphoplives.net/ or join us on FB in the Gospel of Hip Hop or the Temple of Hip Hop facebook groups.

Peace and much love,
Kurt Nice,
Exec. Archivist - Temple of Hip Hop

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Temple of Hip Hop Monthly Meeting

The Temple of Hip Hop Meeting for December 2010 will be the last of the year. It will be held via conference call 12/30/10 at 9pm est. This will be a private meeting.

Monday, November 29, 2010

The M.A.S.S. Movement has been activated

On a special members only session yesterday(11/28/10) on TOHHTV we discussed the national leadership council for the Temple of Hip Hop. Headed by Minister Server for the Ministry. Kurt Nice for Archives. Jah Jah Shakur for School, and Zin Uru heading the Society department. Plans were discussed for the preservation of Hip Hop Kulture through our on-going work with hiphoplives.net and the upcoming events for 2011. On the agenda are:


April 1 - 3, 2011 - International Hip Hop Festival
April 4-10, 2011 - Hip Hop Education Week
May 15-22,2011 - Hip Hop Appreciation Week
November 2011 - Hip Hop History Month

more dates will be added so stay tuned right here for more info.

Peace and Blessings, Kurt Nice

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Guest List

Thank you for stopping by our site. Your support will help us preserve Hip Hop Kulture for future generations, so they may benefit from the progress we made. Make sure you sign the guest list located under the Temple of Hip Hop insignia, so that we can update you on special attractions.